A fan drive assembly including a cooling fan (11) and a fluid coupling device (13). The cooling fan includes a fan hub (17), a spider (15), and a plurality of fan blades (19). The coupling device has an output coupling assembly (21) including a body (23) and a cover (25). The body (23) includes preferably only three mounting portions (67), each being disposed immediately adjacent an outer periphery of the body. Each of the mounting portions (67) defines the necessary machining chucking surfaces (73), and a spider mounting surface (75) including a pilot surface (77) engaging the pilot diameter (79) of the spider (15). The body (23) includes cooling fins (61) covering substantially all of the rearward surface (59) of the body not covered by the mounting portions. The fan hub (17) also includes a rearwardly extending air dam portion (81), limiting localized radial air flow. The fan drive is able to improve the radial air flow through the body cooling fins and achieve substantially greater heat dissipation from the fan drive assembly, thus permitting greater fan speed for a given input speed.
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2. A fan drive assembly comprising:
a cooling fan including a spider portion, a hub mounted to said spider portion and a plurality of blades extending radially from said hub, said spider portion having a central opening defining a pilot diameter; a body member having a rearward surface with a plurality of mounting portions formed thereon, each of said mounting portions defining an annular spider mounting surface and a radially disposed pilot surface configured to contact said pilot diameter, each of said plurality of mounting portions defining an outer periphery and a machine chucking surface at said outer periphery; a means for attaching said spider portion to said plurality of mounting portions with said spider portion contacting said annular mounting surface and said pilot diameter in engagement with said pilot surface; and a coupling member engagable between said body member and a source of rotational motion to transmit torque to said body member, thereby rotating said cooling fan.
3. A fan drive assembly comprising:
a cooling fan including a spider portion, a hub mounted to said spider portion and a plurality of blades extending radially from said hub, said spider portion having a central opening defining a pilot diameter; a body member having a rearward surface with a plurality of mounting portions formed thereon, each of said mounting portions defining an annular spider mounting surface and a radially disposed pilot surface configured to contact said pilot diameter, each of said plurality of mounting portions defining an outer periphery and a machine chucking surface at said outer periphery, said outer periphery of said plurality of mounting portions being circular and said machine chucking surface being linear; and a means for attaching said spider portion to said plurality of mounting portions with said spider portion contacting said annular mounting surface and said pilot diameter in engagement with said pilot surface; and a coupling member engagable between said body member and a source of rotational motion to transmit torque to said body member, thereby rotating said cooling fan.
1. A fan drive assembly of the type comprising a cooling fan attached to a fluid coupling device, said cooling fan comprising a fan hub, a spider portion and a plurality of fan blades extending radially from said fan hub, said fluid coupling device comprising a rotatable coupling assembly including a body member having a rearward surface, and a cover member cooperating with said body member to define a fluid chamber therebetween, a rotatable coupling member disposed in said fluid chamber for rotation relative to said coupling assembly; said coupling assembly and said coupling member cooperating to define a viscous shear chamber therebetween, whereby torque may be transmitted from said coupling member to said coupling assembly in response to the presence of viscous fluid in said viscous shear chamber; said body member including a plurality of cooling fins and a plurality of mounting portions, said spider portion being attached to said mounting portions and defining a pilot diameter; characterized by:
(a) said body member including only three of said mounting portions, each of which is disposed immediately adjacent an outer periphery of said body member; (b) each of said mounting portions including a spider mounting surface on a rearward face thereof, said spider mounting surface including a radially disposed pilot surface in engagement with said pilot diameter of said spider portion; (c) said plurality of cooling fins covering substantially all of said rearward surface of said body member not covered by said mounting portions; and (d) said body member defining an outside diameter, and said spider portion pilot diameter defining a diameter which is from about 53% to 83% of said outside diameter.
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This is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/756,344, filed Jan. 8, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,358,810, issued Mar. 19, 2002, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/257,112, filed on Feb. 25, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,206,639, issued Mar. 27, 2001.
The present invention relates to fan drive assemblies of the type including a cooling fan and a fan drive, and more particularly, to such fan drive assemblies wherein the fan drive is of the type in which heat is generated as a result of the transmission of torque within the fan drive, and the ability of the fan drive to dissipate such generated heat represents a limiting factor on the torque transmitting capability of the fan drive assembly.
Although the present invention may be used with various types and configurations of torque transmitting fan drives, it is especially adapted for use with fan drive assemblies of the type including a viscous fluid coupling device as the fan drive, and will be described in connection therewith.
Fan drive assemblies of the type which may benefit from the use of the present invention have found several uses, one of the most common of which is in connection with cooling the radiator of a vehicle engine. As is well known to those skilled in the art, the fan drive of the typical fan drive assembly comprises a viscous fluid coupling device, so named because the coupling utilizes a high viscosity fluid to transmit torque, by means of viscous shear drag, from an input coupling member (clutch) to an output coupling member (housing), with the cooling fan being bolted, or otherwise suitably attached, to the output coupling member.
The present invention is especially advantageous when used on a relatively high horsepower fan drive assembly, i.e., one which is capable of transmitting somewhere in the range of about two to about twelve horsepower from the fan drive to the cooling fan. Typically, such high horsepower fan drives include an output coupling member of the type which comprises a cast aluminum body and a cast aluminum cover. The input coupling member is typically also made as a cast aluminum member, and cooperates with the body and/or the cover to define a plurality of interdigitated lands and grooves which define the viscous shear space. When the shear space is filled with viscous fluid, typically a silicon fluid, torque is transmitted from the input coupling member to the output coupling assembly, in response to the rotation of the input coupling member.
During such torque transmission, substantial heat is generated as a result of the shearing of the viscous fluid between the lands and grooves. The amount of heat generated is generally proportional to the "slip speed" of the fan drive, i.e., the difference between the speed of the input and the speed of the output. It is generally well understood by those skilled in the art that the ability to transmit torque is limited by the ability of the device to dissipate the heat generated. For example, in a viscous fan drive, if the temperature of the viscous fluid exceeds a certain maximum temperature, the result will be a deterioration of the viscous properties of the fluid, resulting in a gradual loss of the torque transmitting capability of the fluid.
In the fan drive art, it has been conventional for the design and development of a particular cooling fan to occur generally independently of the design and development of the viscous fan drive with which the fan is to be utilized. In other words, the fan is designed to provide the desired operating parameters (e.g., torque, air flow, etc.), thus determining the blade configuration and spacing, and then the mounting portion of the fan (the "spider") is designed or merely modified to adapt to the configuration of the particular fan drive mounting arrangement (e.g., mounting pads or bosses, disposed at a particular diameter from the axis of the fan drive).
What has not been conventional in the fan drive art is to design the cooling fan and the fan drive as a "package", with the goal of maximizing the heat dissipation of the overall fan drive assembly. As a result, it would appear that, at the time of the present invention, there is no commercially available fan drive assembly which achieves nearly its optimum, potential heat dissipation (heat rejection). As a further result, practically every fan drive assembly in commercial use is larger and more expensive than is actually necessary, in order to achieve a particular, desired flow of cooling air through the radiator.
Although the present invention is not limited to a fan drive assembly in which the fan is mounted to the rearward side of the housing (body), rather than being mounted to the cover, the invention is especially advantageous in such an arrangement, and will be described in connection therewith. A typical "rear mount" fan drive is illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,384,824, in which the body member includes four mounting bosses located radially inward of the body cooling fins. As a result, the fan spider interferes with the radial flow of cooling air through the body cooling fins, thus reducing the heat dissipation capability of the particular fan drive assembly.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved fan drive assembly in which the cooling fan and the fluid coupling device driving the fan are designed such that the overall assembly approaches the optimum, potential heat dissipation.
It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide an improved fan drive assembly in which the cooling fan is mounted to the body (housing) of the fluid coupling device in a manner which substantially improves the flow of air through the housing cooling fins.
It is a related object of the present invention to provide an improved fan drive assembly which accomplishes the above-stated objects, and in which the cooling fan is configured to further improve the flow of air through the housing cooling fins.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an improved fan drive assembly which accomplishes the above-stated .objects, and in which the cover cooling fins are configured to improve the flow of air through the cover cooling fins.
The above and other objects of the invention are accomplished by the provision of a fan drive assembly of the type comprising a cooling fan attached to a fluid coupling device, the cooling fan comprising a fan hub, a spider portion, and a plurality of fan blades extending radially from the fan hub. The fluid coupling device comprises a first rotatable coupling assembly including a body member having a rearward surface, and a cover member cooperating with the body member to define a fluid chamber therebetween, a second rotatable coupling member being disposed in the fluid chamber for rotation relative to the first coupling assembly. The first coupling assembly and the second coupling member cooperate to define a viscous shear chamber therebetween, whereby torque may be transmitted from the second coupling member to the first coupling assembly in response to the presence of viscous fluid in the shear chamber. The body member includes a plurality of cooling fins and a plurality of mounting portions, the spider portion being attached to the mounting portions and defining a pilot diameter.
The improved fan drive assembly is characterized by the body member including a plurality of mounting portions, each of which is disposed immediately adjacent an outer periphery of the body member. Each of the mounting portions defines a machining chucking surface, and a spider mounting surface on a rearward face thereof. The spider mounting surface includes a pilot surface in engagement with the pilot diameter of the spider portion. The plurality of cooling fins covers substantially all of the rearward surface of the body member not covered by the mounting portions.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, the fan hub and each of the plurality of fan blades cooperate to define a rearward axially extending air dam portion operable to restrict localized radial air flow.
Referring now to the drawings, which are not intended to limit the invention,
The cooling fan 11 may, within the scope of the present invention, have various configurations and constructions, and the invention is not limited to the particular construction shown, except as is specifically noted otherwise hereinafter. The cooling fan 11 comprises a stamped annular metal spider 15, which is usually a relatively thin, flat, sheet-like member. Preferably, an annular plastic hub portion 17 is molded about the outer periphery of the spider 15. However, the use of terms like "spider" and "hub" should not be construed as implying structural limitations. For example, within the scope of the present invention, the spider 15 could be molded integrally with the hub portion 17. Typically, there is a plurality of fan blades 19 molded integrally with the hub portion 17, the fan blades 19 being shown only fragmentarily in
The fluid coupling device 13 typically includes an output coupling assembly 21 including a diecast aluminum housing (body) member 23, and a diecast aluminum cover member 25. Typically, the body 23 and cover 25 are secured together such as by a rollover of the outer periphery of the cover 25. However, in some coupling devices, the body and the cover are bolted together.
The body 23 and cover 25 cooperate to define a fluid chamber, and disposed therein is an input coupling member 27. As is well known in the art, the fluid coupling device 13 is adapted to be driven by a liquid cooled engine (not shown). The device includes an input shaft 29 on which the input coupling member 27 is mounted. The input shaft 29 is rotatably driven, typically by means of a flange 31 which may be bolted to the mating flange of an engine water pump (also not shown). The input shaft 29 functions as a support for the inner race of a bearing set 33, which is seated on the inside diameter of the body 23. The forward end (left end in
The body 23 and the cover 25 cooperate to define a fluid chamber, as mentioned previously, which is separated, by means of a circular valve plate 37 into a fluid operating chamber 39 and a fluid reservoir chamber 41. Thus, it may be seen that the input coupling member 27 is disposed within the fluid operating chamber 39.
The cover 25 defines a raised, annular reservoir-defining portion 43, which is disposed to be generally concentric about an axis of rotation A of the device. The cover 25 further defines a generally cylindrical shaft support portion 45, and rotatably disposed within the shaft support portion 45 is a valve shaft 47, extending outwardly (to the left in
Operatively associated with the outer end of the valve shaft 47 is a temperature-responsive bimetal element, which in the subject embodiment, and by way of example only, comprises a coil member 53. The manner in which the bimetal coil 53 operates to control the movement of the valve arm 49, in response to variations in ambient air temperature, is well known in the art, forms no part of the present invention, and will not be described further herein.
Although not shown herein in either
In the subject embodiment, and by way of example only, the input coupling member 27 includes a forward surface which defines a plurality of annular lands 55. The adjacent surface of the cover 25 forms a plurality of annular lands 57. The annular lands 55 and 57 are interdigitated to define a serpentine-shaped viscous shear chamber therebetween. The operation of the fluid coupling device 13 may be better understood by reference to U.S. Pat. No. 4,974,712, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference. Briefly, when torque is transmitted from the vehicle engine by means of the input shaft 29 to the input coupling member 27, the result is a shearing of the viscous fluid contained in the shear space between the annular lands 55 and 57, the shear space also being referred to hereinafter by the reference numeral 58.
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It is one important aspect of the present invention to recognize the importance of the radial flow of cooling air over the body 23 as a factor in the overall heat dissipation capability of the fan drive assembly. Therefore, as one important structural feature of the present invention, the functions of machining chucking and fan mounting have been combined into a single structure. Each of the mounting bosses 67 also includes a flat, transverse spider mounting surface 75, against which a forward surface of the spider 15 is disposed, and a generally annular pilot surface 77. As the name implies, the function of the pilot surface 77 is to "pilot" or to locate accurately an inside pilot diameter 79 (see
In accordance with another important aspect of the present invention, and as may best be seen in
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In accordance with another feature of the invention, and to further improve the heat dissipation of the fin portions 87, an annular plate-like member 91 is provided in engagement with the tip portions of the fin portions 87. Preferably, the plate-like member 91 is relatively thin, perhaps even being thin enough to be somewhat deformable upon assembly, wherein the member 91 may simply be pressed into an annular channel 93 formed in the tips of the fin portions 87 Preferably, the annular channel 93 would be used "as cast", so that the feature would be essentially "free" in terms of manufacturing expense. It is believed that the presence of the annular member 91 has the effect of directing air flow through the cooling fins 85, and more specifically, constraining air flow within the fin portions 87, thereby maximizing heat transfer from the fin portions in much the same way as the spider 15 does in connection with the cooling fins 61. This aspect of the invention is also illustrated in the air flow diagram of FIG. 5B.
In connection with the development and testing of the present invention, it has been determined that each of the individual features, illustrated and described herein, contributes positively to the heat dissipation of the fan and fan drive assembly. In addition, the individual features have been "optimized" so that the overall fan and fan drive assembly achieves the nearly optimum heat dissipation. This improvement is illustrated in the graph of
In conducting the testing shown in the graph of
Several observations may be made about the performance of the present invention, and the results of the substantially improved heat dissipation resulting from the invention (enhanced assembly). First, the average fan speed for the enhanced assembly was at least about 150 RPM higher than for the baseline assembly, even before droop occurred, i.e., from the initial 4000 RPM input speed until the input speed reached about 4600 RPM. Secondly, for the baseline assembly, droop occurred at 4900 RPM, i.e., above that input speed, performance of the assembly would not be considered acceptable. In the case of the invention, the droop did not occur until the input speed reached about 5300 RPM, and even then the assembly of the present invention still was capable of providing a fan speed of nearly 2900 RPM whereas, when the baseline unit drooped at 4900 RPM input speed, its fan speed was already down to just over 2700 RPM. As is well known to those skilled in the art, it is important to keep the viscous fluid relatively cooler, because the viscosity then remains at a higher level, which accounts for the increased fan speed for a given input speed. Thus, the empirical data showing the higher fan speed for any given input speed tends to prove the hypothesis above that the present invention results in substantially greater heat dissipation, i.e., the viscous fluid remains cooler.
Another advantage of the invention relates to the number of cooling fins 61 (see FIG. 3). As a result of the improved air flow over the body cooling fins 61, it has been determined as part of the development of the subject embodiment that the number of fins 61 can be decreased, from over 60 to only 42, without a loss of heat dissipation. The reduction in the number of fins made it possible to improve the integrity of the body die casting, and at the same time, reduce the overall weight of the body.
The invention has been described in great detail in the foregoing specification, and it is believed that various alterations and modifications of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from a reading and understanding of the specification. It is intended that all such alterations and modifications are included in the invention, insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims.
Light, Gerard M., Robb, Neil E., Debrabander, James R., Buckley, Donald E.
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